 I think it's massive, I think there's a lot of stuff on the 10,000 hours to become elite at anything. I don't necessarily believe that, but what I do believe is that the younger you can be, just to get that feel for the ball, just to get touches on either foot, just to learn to dribble either foot, turn, master the ball. Of course, 20 years ago that he didn't have phones, he didn't have iPads, he spent a lot of time with the ball and that's why I think there's so much. To master anything, to master any skill, you have to put time in and you have to love it and I think that's where the passion comes in. If you're passionate about it, you'll want to do it and you'll want to challenge yourself in different ways, but for me it's just, you know, the more comfortable you can be, particularly in today's game, on the ball, receiving the ball, turning. And as boring as it is sometimes, bear the things you need to do up against the wall, bang, receive, turn, back, receive our volleys, volleys. You know, just so you're comfortable in any type of scenario and I think for me that's a thing. If you haven't got that technical mastery, it's very difficult to then use it when you become under pressure in a game.